EU nationals living in the UK will get more detail later of what rights they can expect to have after Brexit.
A 15-page document outlining plans for EU citizens to be granted "settled status" will be published as Theresa May addresses MPs on EU matters.
Ministers have sought to reassure the 3.2m residents they will "effectively" have the same rights as UK citizens.
But EU leaders have warned against people being treated differently depending on when they moved to the UK.
Both sides have said they want an early agreement on the issue which also gives certainty to the 1.2 million British expats living on the continent after the UK leaves the EU - expected to be on 29 March 2019.
However, both sides have resisted offering any unilateral guarantees, saying they want a reciprocal deal.
The PM sketched out the principles of her offer to EU nationals at Friday's EU leaders' summit, saying she wanted to give certainty to all those who had "made their lives and homes" in the UK.
She is expected to give more detail when she updates MPs about the summit in the House of Commons as 14:30 BST.
Under the outline plan, all those who have lived lawfully in the UK for at least five years would be able to stay and could expect roughly the same benefits, in terms of access to pensions, welfare and healthcare, as UK citizens.
It is understood those who have not yet reached five years would be entitled to stay on until they reach the threshold for settled status while those arriving after an as-yet-unspecified cut-off date would be given a "grace period" - expected to be two years - to get a work permit or return to their home countries.
Ministers have not confirmed the exact cut-off date for eligibility but indicated that it would fall somewhere between March 29 2017, when the UK triggered Article 50, and Britain's actual leaving date.
'Long way to go'
Other outstanding issues include whether settled status will be extended to spouses, children and other family members currently living outside the UK and who will police the new rules. The government says British courts should be sovereign but the EU says the European Court of Justice should be involved.
Full story at BBC.
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